reports - BS and Dressage first Prelim and Elementary

blood_magik

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It's been a while so I thought I'd do a quick report/update. :)

After almost a year of blood, sweat and tears (mostly of frustration), Beau finally made his dressage debut. It didn't start off too well as we arrived very late and subsequently only had 20 minutes to let him see the arena and warm up. He's usually a bit of a drama llama as he finds warm ups *very* exciting so I was expecting him to have a bit of a meltdown, but he was surprisingly chilled and thankfully just put his head down and cracked on with things.

He was a little tense going in as I hadn't had enough time to really get him soft (he's generally pretty stiff in himself, plus he has arthritic hocks) but he did a sweet enough test considering. We had two mistakes - he overreacted to my aid when I asked for canter and picked up the wrong leg and later did walk to canter instead of walk to trot - but overall I was really pleased with his attitude. We ended up 4th in our section with 63.83%.

We had another go at the same test a few weeks later at a different venue. I hate the warm up there as it's quite small and Beau hates having his personal space invaded but, again, he warmed up really well without any drama. I made sure I had 45 minutes to get him really working this time and allow for a bit of chill-out time to let him settle before we went in. He was a little bit look-y to start with but I felt that our test was definitely more relaxed this time around. Again, there were a few minor bobbles on my part where I let my accuracy slip (going too far into the corners on circles, second half of the circles slightly too big) but overall I was really pleased with how our test went.
Again, we ended up 4th in our section but this time with 67.12%.

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After that we did a bit of jumping. Brave pants on, I entered the 1.10m open and was pleasantly surprised when my nerve held up. Beau finds jumping *very* exciting, especially at home, so I stuck to my tried-and-tested warm up routine of taking him outside and waiting in the holding area until it was his turn. Once in the ring, he settled and although he was a little look-y coming round to the first fence, he did listen when I asked him to wait.

I was a little worried about the second fence but we got a good shot to it and also to the one-stride one-stride triple along the back wall. Things went a little wrong at fence 8 though - I held instead of pushing and as the distance to 8 was on a forward stride, we were slightly off it and had the back rail of the first part of the double. I slipped my reins over the second part and just wasn't quick enough to get them back so circled and pulled up to sort out my knitting before continuing to the last two fences. :o
So not quite the result I'd been hoping for but we did manage to tick getting round a Newcomers/1.10m open off of our bucket list after pulling up halfway round during our last attempt over a year ago.

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I cut the circle out as the time I spent collecting myself afterwards made the video rather long.
[video=youtube;h4A6GddiyQo]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h4A6GddiyQo[/video]

Since then we've hit a few stumbling blocks. Beau was jumping fab and we were all set to go to another show but then he started stopping, as he tends to do when his hocks are hurting. We got them sorted but then he became really uneven in the contact so he had to have his teeth done and his diastema taken care of. Then he ended up with these weird lesions on his one white leg and the vet decided they warranted being biopsied, which lead to another week off work while the biopsy site healed.
He's had the best part of a month off now so hopefully that will be it for a little while and we can crack on with getting him fit again ready for the summer.

While Beau's been off, I've been plugging away with getting Raz ready for our elementary debut. We've decided to put jumping on the back burner for now and concentrate on dressage with the odd bit of showing as he's just so tricky to jump (he's super careful and has a tendency to get cocky but then isn't very brave when it goes wrong).

I had a fab lesson with Andrew Gould, who gave me some really good tips on how to make spookiness work to our advantage before working on exercises getting Raz to take more weight behind. With our regular trainer, we've been working on the quality of the paces (they can be a little underpowered), making sure we're even on both reins (right rein paces tend to be slightly bigger naturally) and my accuracy. By the last lesson, I was relatively confident that we would get through E57 without embarrassing ourselves, although the left leg yield wasn't quite as sharp as I'd hoped it would be.

We'd decided to do N37 as our warm up to let Raz get used to arena as it was right next to the lorry park and he'd been spooked by someone unloading right next to the ring mid-way through our test. He's been much better since starting on Magic so I was quietly hopeful that we'd manage to get through both tests without him refusing to go near the judge's table/banners/flowers etc...

We had an early start on Saturday as I'd offered to take a fellow livery's horse in the lorry with us. Raz was a little unsettled when his new best friend was taken off the lorry but he soon quietened down enough for me to plait him while his pal - also R - went off to do his two tests. By the time it was Raz's turn, he was lovely and chilled and we had the easiest warm up we've had so far - he was soft and supple, and we quickly ran through the check list our trainer had given us the day before.

Going in, he had a quick look at the judge's table but a few circles up that end seemed to settle him. N37 was the first time we'd had to halt upon entry so I was relieved when we got a good first halt.
He was relatively obedient during the rest of the test - I think he could have crossed a little more behind and our rein back at C was a tiny bit squint, plus the initial half wasn't quite long enough but the mediums felt fantastic and he ended up getting 8s for them across the board.
We ended up in the middle of the pack, with 67.38% and 4th (out of 7) in our section.

Next up was E57. We had an hour between tests so I hopped off and took Raz to get a drink before heading back round to the warm up. He felt a little tired so I only did 20 minutes - lots of transitions between the paces and within the canter, and a little leg yield. Someone loading their horse spooked him while we were walking past the judge's table (typical :o) so we did a quick circle on both reins up that end before starting our test.

He was a little tense due to the spook so our first halt wasn't great and he was a little reluctant to turn when he reached C but he did a nice rein back and the medium trot was fab (if I do say so myself ;)). I actually remembered to ride my medium canters and we actually got an 8 (!) for our collected canter-trot-collected canter transition from E-X-B.
Next up was the simple changes through walk on a serpentine. My trainer had actually measured/counted them out for us during training so I was so busy trying to remember where I had to hit the track while counting strides that my transitions were quite as clean as they'd been at home. They weren't terrible, but they could have been better, and then our final halt was a little bit squint.

So we ended up 3rd (out of 3 :D) with 66.96%, which I was delighted with for our first attempt. :)

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I've since registered Raz with BD so once we get his points back, we can make a decision as what to aim for this year. I'd love to do areas but I'm not sure how he'd cope with a really busy show - he was rather a handful the time we took him to Blair and I ended up pulling him from his class - and I don't want to knock his confidence when he's finally starting to trust me.


Until the next outing...

Thanks for reading. :)
 
They look super :)

With areas, some venues are scary, some are not. Try and have a look round any that are vaguely local, you will get an idea of what they're like. Often times they hold dressage a couple of weeks before their area show so that the horses can get used to the venue, well worth attending but get your entries in quick as they book up within minutes!!
 
I hope Beau's back on form soon! Out of interest, what was the advice re: using spooks to your advantage? One of mine can be a bit spooky (more naughty / excited spooks as he's rarely actually scared of anything!) so all tips are welcome!

Ditto Pigeon re: Areas. I enjoyed going last year and it's nice to have something to aim for!
 
They look super :)

With areas, some venues are scary, some are not. Try and have a look round any that are vaguely local, you will get an idea of what they're like. Often times they hold dressage a couple of weeks before their area show so that the horses can get used to the venue, well worth attending but get your entries in quick as they book up within minutes!!

great advice, thank you. :)
I'm actually heading to one of the potential areas venues for our next outing. We've been before and there were a few monsters hiding in the wings but I'm hoping that he'll be okay with the new calmer.
Unless they go all out at areas and put flowers etc everywhere, in which case I may have to pack my parachute. ;)

I hope Beau's back on form soon! Out of interest, what was the advice re: using spooks to your advantage? One of mine can be a bit spooky (more naughty / excited spooks as he's rarely actually scared of anything!) so all tips are welcome!

Ditto Pigeon re: Areas. I enjoyed going last year and it's nice to have something to aim for!

The main bit of advice was to really try and ride them forwards into the contact and to ask for a slight bend away from what they're spooking at. Also, to stop the horse hanging off he had me take the diagonal, ask for bend to what will be the new inside (opening your hand towards your hip if need be) and then leg yield towards the wall.

Of course, we didn't have any major spooking on the day of the lesson but his advice has definitely come in handy since. :D
I really rode coming up the centre line towards the judge's table in both tests and while Raz backed off a little bit, it wasn't noticeable enough to warrant a comment.

Great results :) love the video, making those jumps look effortless!

Thank you. He certainly made them feel small. ;)

well done, great report and also love the jumping videos . both looking fab!

Thank you. :)
 
Dressage diva these days :lol:.

Lovely update and some cracking results!

I have to ride Topaz very forward into a contact sometimes to stop the spooking and get her to concentrate, shoulder-in is your friend!
 
Yes... I think it was being decked 4 times in the space of a 30 minute jumping lesson that made me decide dressage was the way to go with Raz (In my defence, only one was my fault). Funnily enough we haven't tried to jump more than 80cm since seeing as I don't bounce quite as well as I used to. :D

Being a total BD newbie, I do have a question about point allocation - do they email you once they've sorted it or will I just have to keep checking online?
I have no idea how it works and I'm itching to start planning our next outing. :)

Videos of the two tests for those who'd like a laugh. My position seems to have gotten worse over the last month or so, so that will more than likely be the focus of tomorrow's lesson. :o

[video=youtube;WpAf6W9Ci9o]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WpAf6W9Ci9o[/video]
[video=youtube;9svGweVruFQ]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9svGweVruFQ[/video]
 
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Ouch I can understand the switch after that :(.

BD won't email you about points unless you qualify for AF's or Regionals in which case they'll send you a Q'ing email. Best to keep track yourself....

Points are allocated:
60-61.99% = 1 point
62-63.99% = 2 points
64-65.99% = 3 points
66-67.99% = 4 points
68-69.99% = 5 points
70-71.99% = 6 points
72-73.99% = 7 points
74-75.99% = 8 points
76-77.99% = 9 points
78-79.99% = 10 points
80%+ = 11 points

For Area Festivals you need 3 x 62%+ sheets for Elementary/Novice (bronze or silver its the same)

Regionals (no bronze at regionals):
Novice silver is 19 points total 10 from Q'ing classes from scores over 67%.
Elementary silver is 15 points total 8 have to be from Q'ing classes (schedule will have a Q for that test) from scores over 65%.

Lovely tests for the most part the only thing which stands out for me is it will help if you can get him to settle more in the contact and be more confident to take it forward :). If you roll your shoulders back your position looks fine to me, stop being so hard on yourself :).
 
Thanks for that. Worked on my position in both of my lessons this morning and it was much better by the end. Just need to work on my sitting trot and not being afraid to let go a little bit more. :eek:

Just checked and Raz has initially been awarded 15 points at both prelim and novice so I can now sit and work out what we're eligible for. :)
 
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Excellent stuff :). Sitting trot is the pits :lol:, making sure the horse is as soft and up through the back as possible will help!

As for points you should be ok from prelim silver, novice bronze. Then it's up to you where you start from there and what you want to aim at :).
 
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